Skip to main content

Jupiter Systems launches PixelNet in Europe

Jupiter Systems has launched its new PixelNet product line in Europe which the company claims is a fundamentally new way to capture, distribute, control and display digital and analogue video sources.
February 3, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
80 Jupiter Systems has launched its new PixelNet product line in Europe which the company claims is a fundamentally new way to capture, distribute, control and display digital and analogue video sources.

PixelNet distributes the process of capturing inputs, routing signals, and displaying content, among intelligent nodes, making it easier and less expensive to design, build, and manage complex control rooms. Jupiter says this revolutionary new technology can display these varied inputs in a wide range of applications, from very large display walls with multiple inputs and outputs to a single desktop.

"This is a game-changing product," said Brady O. Bruce, Jupiter's VP of marketing and strategic alliances. "Using PixelNet nodes, about the size of a paperback book, our users can build a powerful PixelNet visual network quickly and easily. PixelNet is incredibly scalable. To handle an additional input, you just add an input node. To add a new display, you simply connect one more output node. New nodes are automatically detected and integrated by the system. The simplicity is amazing and the video quality is stunning." Based on technology widely used in data communication networks, PixelNet adopts Gigabit Ethernet and Ethernet switches for use with high resolution, real-time video. Using packet-switching technology any information source can be shown on any display, as a window on a single display, or as a window spanning multiple display devices in a display wall. Any source can be shown at any size on any display or array of displays.

Jupiter says PixelNet's greatest benefit is its scalability. The same component parts can scale from a single input sent to a single output to literally hundreds of inputs and outputs. Outputs can be defined as a single display or logically grouped together to create one or more display walls. If another input is added or the entire wall must be expanded, it can be done by simply adding a few PixelNet nodes. There is no need to reconfigure the entire system. Moreover, input and output nodes are hot-pluggable and hot- swappable, and since PixelNet is based on Ethernet technology, the entire system is inherently fault-tolerant.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Road safety systems on show at ITS World Congress
    January 30, 2012
    A vast array of new products and systems for aiding road safety were displayed at the ITS World Congress in October. David Crawford assesses a selection of safety initiatives exhibited in Orlando. Vital roles for ITS applications in road traffic safety emerge clearly from a new report from the US Transportation Safety Advancement Group. The report has been carried out for the Next Generation 911 What's Next Forum, which is preparing the way for future development of the US national 911 emergency single call
  • Optibus gets its message across
    October 25, 2024
    Passenger Billboards convert complex service data into information displays
  • Caltrans upgrades video wall
    February 26, 2013
    When Caltrans district 7 began the first phase of a multi-phase audio-visual (AV) system upgrade at its Los Angeles facility, it contracted with Electrosonic to create a brighter, more reliable video wall for traffic monitoring that takes advantage of the latest in projection technology. “Caltrans district 7 has more than 400 cameras on the highways of Los Angeles and Ventura counties,” says Electrosonic project manager Guy Fronte. “They can review camera feeds 24/7 in the facility and when there’s a traffi
  • Time for a rethink on road user charging
    February 1, 2012
    There is no value in further US VMT charging trials, except to delay the inevitable. These trials should end after completion of the University of Iowa's National Evaluation of a Mileage-based Road User Charge. There is far greater promise in unleashing private operators to commence profitable, non-tolling services, then using these for toll assessment and collection as fuel distributors are currently used to collect fuel taxation. Bern Grush writes